File:Alors Tout a bascule.jpg

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Erik Pevernagie

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Object type painting
object_type QS:P31,Q3305213
Description

"Then everything capsized - Alors, tout a basculé ", by Erik Pevernagie,(80 x100 cm) , oil on canvas xx

The whole wire system of the brain could be disconnected in a spark of a second by a sometimes insignificant detail.

An unexpected incident or an innocuous phone call may provoke ethereal distress, plunging our lives into chaos. Like a sudden twist of fate, it can overturn our mental frame and ransack the assembled experiences of our history.

When we fail to reflect on the undercurrents of our circumstances, we may have permanent misgivings about the quality of our interpretations. A lucid reading of our acts and desires helps us avoid tumbling into the frustrating gap between what we expect and what others expect.

An insipid voice message or an incongruent emergence from the "other" world can disrupt our whole thinking system. If we cannot deal with our fragmentation and assess the deconstruction of our identity, a corny incident can quickly capsize our being. A misinterpretation of facts and expectations perturbs our awareness and unsettles our perception.

When "I" and "me" don't get along very well, the road to oneness may often be bumpy.

Disruption of our mental construct can be deeply disorienting. Still, it may also provide an opportunity for growth and reevaluation, prompting us to rebuild our mental frameworks perhaps more resiliently than before.

The complex interplay between our external environment and our internal psychological processes, the dual nature of psychological disruption—both destructive and constructively thought-provoking—is a profound challenge in our human experience.

Recognizing that external events can unnoticeably be woven into the larger narrative of our lives must be an overwhelming focal point. They can reshape our entire mental framework and force us to reconstruct our sense of reality.

Phenomenon: Destiny, mental disconnection

Factual starting point of the picture: Man with telephone
Date 1999
date QS:P571,+1999-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
Source/Photographer Erik Pevernagie

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attribution share alike
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  • share alike – If you remix, transform, or build upon the material, you must distribute your contributions under the same or compatible license as the original.

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current16:43, 2 December 2014Thumbnail for version as of 16:43, 2 December 20141,452 × 1,177 (616 KB)Onlysilence (talk | contribs)User created page with UploadWizard

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